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| Course DescriptionIn this course we will discuss the core concepts of computer organization. We will examine concepts related to both hardware (gates, memory, binary system, etc) and software (compilers, assemblers, etc) and of course their interface. We will introduce and use in the lab assignments two important tools in this course: assembly programming (we use RISC-V) and hardware programming (we use Verilog). By the end of the course students will be able to: Lecture Hours
All lectures are in person but will be recorded and made available for you on eclass (Moodle). If you cannot attend you can connect through Zoom. It is strongly recommended to attend the lectures in real time but if you have time conflict with other courses offered during the time slot, it is strogly recommended to watch the video shortly afterwards and before the labs. TestsThere will be a midterm worth 25% and a final worth 45%. The final will cover all the material in the course and will be during the regular exam period. Labs.There will be eight lab assignments carrying in total 10% of the final mark. These will be during the prescheduled labs. The seven best labs will count. The programming components of the labs are marked by the TAs at the end of the lab session and you get either pass or fail. If you miss a lab you get a fail for this lab. Missing only one lab will not directly affect your final mark for the course (since the best seven out of the eight count) but missing more than that will. There will be TAs and the instructor available in person during the lab, and you can ask them for hints and guidance for the programming part of the lab. Also the TAs or the instructor can ask to review your work so far and offer help. The regular labs may include a multiple choice quiz that will carry 50% of the mark. If for example you complete and submit the programming assignment and receive 80% on the quiz the mark for this lab will be 90%. There will be two labtests, one after the first four regular labs and the other after the other four regular labs which carry 10% each. The labtests are conducted in a similar manner but the TAs and the instructor will only answer clarification questions. You prepare for the labs by studying the material for the labs in this site. Make sure you study the lab for the week, the user manual, the assembler manual and system calls manual If you complete the regular lab early, you ask a TA or the instructor to review the programming component and record the result. Then you can log out. Otherwise submit your work which will be marked by the TAs. Text
The text is "Computer Organization and Design: The Hardware/Software
Interface" by David A. Patterson, John L. Hennessy RISC-V edition.
Last
Modified: Sep 6 2022 |